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o ' NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1916. w BRITAEN HERALD [ the army in Korea proved the open- | And that conclusion Will be what is| BABITS UNITED FOR FREEDOM ; T e e o e T P — ing wedge for him however. ' His: determined by the Old Guard in the ‘ WHAT OTHERS SAY " St s el e ey e i | » ew Union’s President Plays One While the British and German| If the sea fight had ended more Hour a Day. | 5 G < | admiralties dispute over the results of | (New York World.) Views on all sides o mely | the Skagerrak fight, controversy questions as discussed In ex- || G501 be out of the question so far Babies’ Union, for the protection of 4‘]1:::1:.’,(-‘5 tlful come fo | the as_the United States is concerned. anniversary in nd one infants from their parents, was or- Elerals Olllc “howgnlonds o oRien B0 B e e e f the * which ND AN Y § = e : e : ew days o e whic FACTS AND FANCIE: | ganized today at the Fabian club, No. have many accounts to settle with ) Genis ol ¢ s : i 2 respective | have given a generally recognized or 15 C 7 5 ith J 8 lexnoal el Ioube Robert Lightning Bug Kultur. [feschiothena analiwlchatholigrornes name to a battle. Yet Howe's famous imitos ooy et GefOentaye Month J pdliilapan. & : | Hitchcock may have spilled the | Stuart Chase, son of Mr. and Mrs. R i O e O L DU DOSed [l e o e i ey pavable in advance, 0 Cents @ Montn, | He is credited with having-been an | beans but‘they seem to have been | Stuart Chase of No. 1697 Common- ESEgicils Bress) |jeheyimasgdistortion conceal irheiinli e ‘ s 7.00 a Year, aid against the Boxers in the upris- | underdone anyway—Lynn Item. wealth avenue, was elected president, [ German efficiency again to the fore- | and in the light e R ay 31 | heavily, and cach was well content oniy prontatia aavertising’ modtum n | ing: Following the death of the Em-.| _ President:Wilkon may not have had | and Jacqucline Coryell of Brookline, | ground! A bulletin, ostensibly of | Conflicts later on the fa SRS pull off and let a tough adversary he city. Circulazton books and press 3 i | the St. Louis convention .in mind in | secretary. v %% | miay become of minor importance | home for repairs cven British ar foom always: open <o advestlaers. peror and Empress he was dismissed | calling for a strict observance of Flag | Robert's father and mother spent | OCT™an origin, couched in technical | “Enough is admitted on both sides, | et e G Blirerala will be found on sate at Hota- | {T0m office because of his power over : Day | their honeymoon among the working | lansuage and ultra serious in “tenor, | hcwever, to enforce upon the Ameri- )| = CUCHS e eA A ng's New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- | the army. He was recalled in 1911 | pgople of Rochester, N. Y. to get |brings to light the latest Teutonic | ¢an congress and people a lesson | PRER B0 o (0 e that he was content to 1er up si HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, ability was recognized and he was ap-,| conferencé now in Drogress. Proprietors. pointed to the highest post in the | This one dose was sufficient to ai pa d}:g:a]fugzu]):iexcepiad\ at 4:15 p. m. | empire when he was but twenty-six illusion the Citizen. And he retired ilding, €7 Church St vears of age. His genius at organiza- | thatinight with a Terrible Headach prosperously the British would have | | been more disposed to recall that it Boston, June 6—The International | | ended on June !. That is a glorious red at the Post Office at N Britaln r v S re-org izati s Second Class Mail Matter. tonas shor e Sieas o <ationt| of the Chinese army after the var | ered by carrles to any part of the city of a victor, th sidc York City; Bogrd Walk, at- 4 .. first hand knowledge of “other half” | preparedness, safety first and atten- | which they have sorely needed. ty. and Hartford Depot. and given supreme command of the!| Nothing can happen in Burope’in | ¢snaitions, iy ‘ In this battle the British have gained TELEPHONI CaLLS. forces of the North. In February®| the next seven:days that will drive | T Ropert is being brought up by sy Deep in the recesses.of his labora- | knowledge at fearful cost. Others e Oma seeeseeeneeeee:--828 11912 he was elected president of the:| ghm‘&so off the:first page.—Brooklyn | tem. He has a frieze in his room, |tory a German biologist 1s now: wor should find instruction in their ex- i B s e i Tagle. with the letters of the alphabet and |ing out the details of a plan whereby | Perience. fizures, for his education in leisure [ old Mother Nature herself is made an We know that powerful cru g are, prizes and limp home h them Portsmouth. It was a downrig! ammer-and- tongs fight, of the traditional British sort with no refineme strate such as Nelson intr It can- not even be said that the fleet behaved well the captain of the leading ship WITH HIS BOOTS ON, | Austria is not explaining whether 1 Kitchener, minister of war.in HUGHES AND THE FLAG. | those advances on the Italian front | are measured up or down or through, —Brockton Times. hours, But he has only one leisure |ally of the Kaiser in his operations at | useful and necessary as the: hour a day. His parcnts permit him |the battlefront. A bug, termed, per- | cannot be pitted against super- to be played with only during that | haps, the luna-locust, has been found | dreadnoughts. We know that great hour. which is sensitive to colors, the vari- | l'attleships held at remote bases are |’ st I iardoss r Pritish fighter and organizer of | pupils of a girls' school in Washing- | Te has thrived under this system |ous varleties of the family being | 2ot likely to be at hand when needed. | |ENOFINE the admiral's ovders ~What | ton, which his daughter attends, for cight months, and his mother |sensitive to different colors. The in- | We know that aircraft and sub- | SarHed the cov was the superior sea | i Erciies s e S faeeon At the rate gold is pouring into ; admits that he is an unusual child. |sect also possesses the peculiar illu- | marines are of immense rvice for e e e : b < 5 | the Morgan coffers from Canada they Miss Jacqueline is hoss of her fam- | minating property of the lightning | scout duty and far attack. Whe, s Base nder his entire staff, at sea. The |since his entry into the presidential| i %ave to enlarge thelr zold storage | ily. Her parents are following the | bug. | Whatever the purpose of the com- | When Howe's flagshp baghedin ince upon which he was sailing is re- | limelight and fittingly enough, paid a | warehouse. — Pittsburgh Gazette- | policy of letting the child follow her | The learned professor has bred | mander of the British cruiser | the stern of a huge 120-gun Irench own free will. millions of the bugs, found to be | squadron may have been, he com- Others clected to the Txecutive | particularly susceptible to the effects | mitted an amazing blunder in bring- committee of the union are Touise |of a light hrown—the khaki color of | ing on an engagement for which he er Hampshire 'in going to the| was not intended to be used as| 1If it is very hot during convention | Pinkham, daughter of the Rev. and |the British aniform, «as not equipped. There is nothing m off the Orkney Islands carried | political capital, it was merely a few | week the republicans may nominate Mrs, Ienry W. Pinkham of Meirose Here is where the plot thickens, in sea power unless its possessor is Justice Hughes as a counter-irri- Victor McNulty, son of Ignatius Mc- | The battle is one. The German | always in force equal or superior to tant—Chicago News. Nulty. and Flizabeth, THelen and | commander, despite the efficient work | the enemy at all points of contact. : “ R 3 Blder, children of Mr. and | of his advance pos scouting par- | To be otherwise in an action in which ar. expected the publication of his re- | Ex-President Taft vs he will sup- | AMrs. |, S. Elder of Medford. ties, observation tower men, etc.,, has | he takes the initiative is foolhardy. through the sides of their own ship. 1 Kitchener wus a typical Eng- | marks. The American people today | port any man the republicans nom- Bl O B been unable to locate a certain Brit- What happened off Jutland was In this ding-dong fashion was won, iyi‘l”“ = Chmlg‘;' T};"” 1“ e ’m;‘ & Hill Wakes Up. ish batte But as dusk approaches | that British cruisers met German \(\ far as ”V]“"Sl w (‘m‘ “h"uvw ,n) and 2 ¢ ! G i e et hry e T akes 5 e L _, ~onsequences that | famous battle of the first of June ommander. ' of the fellaheen, anvthing but American and patriotic | poc. ! (Bridgeport Farmer). :'r?o.::d(‘h'n: ‘lnml-l‘g:wlxtlth‘l‘n ,.r'u"fo(.‘mvfiz ;il‘ifl:‘n“?ffi'l"’h‘if-‘,i‘ ‘gi’,‘,‘cté,‘]‘:lt_\ When | Though not decisive, it was a vic BE-desert bands in | the long |isentiments are not necessary in thej) e . After a score of vears in Congress | bugs deploy in all directions. As soon | British dreadnoughts arrived on the [ tory, and England needed a victory es across the open places with | platform of a party. They are un-| oo [T T Hil discovers that the Amer- |ns a bus Spots a khaki uniform he | scene there was A running fight, with | in 1794 cven more than now. It was attles ta wind up the day, as | derstood. Part of Mr. Hughes in-| g oo :’O ‘::M“l :{:_;‘”“ ‘”__l‘c h‘“]_ for | 103N navy docsn’t exist. He wants the | lights his lantern and exhibits other | results not vet clearly known except }I};:"“‘l‘."“y‘:”':‘lf ‘,‘,‘ l‘\;’\"y‘ ""i? :“"::'a b the victor, he has been for | spired talk was as follows: |the coming campaign.—Cincinnati L ScSt navy in the world and plenty ey fn|1“f»m”m tfe sommanderiiiin o sensrelimay, b it hereiage M IS st i e ST b T e the idol of the British heart “The flag means America first; it | Commercial Tribune. of twelve _inch guns. In fact he |that he has located the enemy. The | weight of metal was the determining hareantabor S ks P 1 s art. s | Would “deliver mail at the mouths of | Teuton artillery is directed at the | factor, and it was the German fleet | the record of the British there in the q present war has’ been a glorious triumph. At Toulon a good chance has | had been thrown away by blundering neglect; the Corsican adventure had come to nothing. On every frontier, after two years, the armies of France Britain and perhaps the great- Speaking yesterday before the ay, according to the- best that be learned has met his - death, ship nobody thought to send orde to the lower deck; a junior officer there happened to open a port, saw a ship a few feet away, and fired the battery with his own hand. When the Brunswick rubbed sides with the Vengeur the lower ports could not be opened, and the Englishmen fired d to have been torpedoed or | high tribute to the flag of the country | Times. | h up by a mine. The British | over which he may preside. His talk it one of the greatest assets ta| words to graduating members of the pllies that h cropped out in ['school. It is doubtful if Mr. Hughes ighting man. Grim and ruth- | are not looking for a president who is fnd efficient, ready for anything | means an undivided ~allegiance; it | G these guns s sherebthic B bues Ta ol o R = §ts v f 3 A e ese guns, ‘ place wher ) :s have shown | that finally sought refuge in its othing makes a congressman so |their sensitiveness to the ugly khaki, | harbors. g loned subscriber who used to write a | . oF 08 TERES 8 Co0 e et B i y ) o P in Esypt and made over the | eficient, cqual to her task. It means | seathing arraisnment of the papers | DpRL A8 an approaching clection. | the battery is blown to smithercens, | Tho house of representatives has troaps from savage bands into | that you cannot be saved by the valor | politics, ending with, “I dare you to &.; (llL breathes smoke and flame. | and there you are! What could be | provided for five great battle-cruisers, age ba : o 3 ¢ jBe. e L Dut he is having a hard time of it, | more scientific and efficient? of which we have none. We want e defenders of the flag. His f and devotion of your ancestors; that | print th Colum > there are so many things to remeni- All the ramifications of the scheme | hattle cruisers for the work of battle Bl is much to be regretted, as |to each generation comes its patriotic : 5 c _ liber. have not yet been worked out. The | cruisers, which in a wisely governed | Were advancing triumphantly to the ; " - T O R £ U0 TIHEE ) ey One must remember the German |learned biologist hopes ultimately to rv must always be incidental, For |Strains of a new tune called thé the conspicuous figures of the | auty, and that upon vour willingness | would think of entering a campaign A Zerma 2 V29 || BT SRl GUNVENG L h Ak Marselllaise Pl ana otlinel contnental | vote, which naturally makes one hire [ have a bug for each color and a dif- | hard-hitting and therefore for true | Marseilla e h is gone. to sacrifice and endure, as those be- wn:_fms_ pr:""’:fl:”: tofbustitheRtrustealiion i et R ferent colored lantern for éach branch | gefense, there must be super-dread- | POWers only Austria was holding out. G astinstontSin One must remember the British vote [ of the allied enemy. When he has | noughts, and for this type of ship the [ 10T Britain, torn with domestic and hence Mr. Hill is very warm for | Perfected it to a state where a cloud | hguse made no appropriation. troubles and deserted by its allies, ultimatums to Germany. of red lightning bugs over a certain This is a monstrous error which [its prestige incomparably lower than One must remember that the presi- | sPot will mean a French field piece | {1 senate committee on naval affairs | RO, tlm; n’lmmcnl could hardly have . . sem dent is popular, and always speak well | and its complement, and a green con- | j5 ; tak correct. | Seemed darker. bts on.” He was on his way | under law intelligently conceived and | 5°% if the president is elected Hill, can- |0f Cossacks, then—that will be some | i life, property and prestige for the | thoush ‘barren of results, was the sia, probably to lend his effi- | impartially administered. not be, and so load upon the shoulders | Kulture! misuse or non-use of its super- | 4TSt ray of cheer. It showed that the “Never had habit of note-writing.” 0f the chief executive any defects in o dreadnoughts and for its deficiency in | British naval ascendancy,, so painfully His letter to Harriman was not a the navy which Mr. Hill has recently The Washerwomen's Union. aircraft and submarines should make | WOR in the previous war and still by ! note, but an ultimatum.—New York : discovercad (New York Tribune.) visellosialation 'on ¥ ithisiisubjectiiat (e S1esas the metterselsoonree thing Kitchener’s services to his | rapacity. It is eloquent of aur com- | Evening Post. 3ut why Mr. Hill should he so hot - % 5 \Washington almost a matter of | it has since become, had not been R e e e e for delivering mail in Furope, and oo Washerwomen —— laundresses, as | lost, and it encouraged England to £ fone, he built up for Britain her [ means America united, strong and | many vears a fighter upon |fore you have secrificed and endured, | LD AT QRiGTanee (eid | S U Tl T, | withdrawal is a word that is not t his death at sea. However, “It speaks of equal rights: of the | polite to mention in official circles t down under the flag of his | inspiration of free institutions exem- | along the Potomac these pre-conven- toward the better organization “There is not a thread in it but roops of the Czar. scorns self-indulgence, weakness and : = routine. S 5 s . 7 cold toward the delivery of persons | Some of them prefer to be called—of keep on till sea power in a 20-years The driving appears to be much | there, is another mystery : o e for T war made an end of French suprem- £ 2 here, is anot stery o s hope [ Cincinnati hiwe formed a labor union. The Disappeari ; | f his hope | The Disappearing Shad. acy on the continent. For such a vie- fa the British public at the | n:on destiny better o Lavarone pl P G At : : ; — siieron e Dovaroneiplateant thatl lifor fa re-election. Chey were duly organized by a mem- (Providence Journal.) | tory, even at heavy cost, the Britist Be the war what it would be T . in the vicinity of Verdun.—Syracuse A person usually is more important | ber of the strectcar men’s union, and | 4 B cost, the British kv to do to prevent the foes | FIFTY KILLED. Herald than a letter. So far from desiring | are now endecavoring to decide what : < an immediate upper hand. Another calamity, such as would that Americans should have right to [shall constitute a day's work and |shad season, just closing, is said to | et nol it in Burope, with delivery at the | what the union rate of pay shall be. | have been unsatistactory. From Glou- be underestimated. It was he | sences of opinion, and of our com- | Along the Atlantic seaboard the | have been longing; failing that, it is not surprising that they should take some comfort in the fact that the bat- tle has showed on their side no weak- hinteer army of several million | have attracted world wide attention Senator Stone declares cester comes the report that the catch | ness except the traditional reckless [t P - M muzz twelve inch suns. Mr. Hill | Unionization is in the air the s raised in a year under his | when sudden death was not the order [ €reas in the army i3 noeded, wnich witef B0 W 0L Zans AL HULY | TUnionlzation fs in the alr thess o convinces a host of Mis uria that = ta at me, | days. D e € ymer ave i i ir nars," . age o I h sailor and 1 don. Fils campaign was | of the day, is today chronicled in the | gon e MOSt of 1390, ’i‘ e - “ and he voted against the president, | grievances of the actors, whose illus- | Was “the poorest in thirt "1'”“- i "““‘;‘“ f"”‘ Britl ailor, and no . | sc 00d the state is.—Kan- & 2 - . 4 Cs ) e = is desire ish is disap- | secret black art on the side of the out with the greatest atten- |newspapers in the description of the | sas et when the latter demanded as much | trious example they are following— |and that this desirable fish is disap- | AT the side of ¢ : % it freetom of the seas for American men | no elf-respecting washerwoman | pearing from the waters of the Dela-~ | adversary to upset calculations. W detail and efficiency and ac- ftornado which swept through Ar- N R and women as Mr, Hill n demands | would submit for a moment to treat. | Ware. Doubtless similar conditions |ing is nervous work when the opp Now come the brides and the roses, | ¢ ity (o Ancs s Al or e Coll| s o : e e Jucne, o O Lot e e e el (| e A I ment succh as some actors and act. | have been noted on other streams and l;(.!( “.\ Im l\\‘1 u;l resourceful; ; e ; - i 2 adu E LG s rt investigati is ir- | despite the heavy losses incurre e comment that was his from | ing five times as many. Unfortunate S S e I resses have to endure—but they |NO xpert investigation is requ 3 profitable summer hoarders. Tt's e Rt oo no b e lcansolof the lloss | battiaisiy s =arced lehaertuily En \ of the British press and | Arkansas has been visited by another | 8reat month—Concord Monitor. ! Publicity For Women. :'n‘\\,: (f"'“.‘.‘f\}.’h‘f”\1':3';'1'(;3“.:J‘C(;fi\,f;’;‘:‘,:'fi of so valuable a food product. | land, it is because it has relievec TG O R ioE | D st River poilution is one of the rea- | rather anxious suspense filled A leader of the Federation of Wom- | queries one of their leaders, “he | Sons for the decline of the shad fish- | rumors of superguns, Zeppel is the setting of nets | tacks and unheard of infernal ma the mouths of the rivers—the | chines. The British may not be where hed its end despite the un- | kansas, Kkilling fifty people and injur- He was not a hero, was even | of its famous high winds and many m g (Waterbury Republican) The senate of San Domingo has voted to impeach the president of the ed. At the time of the battle | ing bodily or financially as a result. | republic. In the old days the pre e Chappelle when it was| The tragedy, when hoats are going | 46Nt would have been assassinated. . A G i —Albany Arg that a shortage of munitions [ down at sea carrying with them ¥ Argus. “No more conventions in large | interesting but his value made itself | of the people of that state are suffer- en’s clubs, urging Hot Springs, Ark, | workingman gets what , he wants. | €ries. Another as the best place * the next con- | We'll show him we can do the same.’” | 2CTOss 5 vention, argues like this True feminists are these, making af | fish are excluded from the spawning | they would like, but at least the grounds in fresh water. A continua- |are. The North battle which end this wasteful policy of course [ed on Junc E le of harder than ever | of June, I a reassurance as to the mastery of the seas it serves in . o contribution to the history ponsible, in part at least, for | thousands of lives, when hundreds Among ) T cities! Let’s meet next time in a|of the movement in this country, the | tion of i Wi | g other thick-skinned people | _ 5% . = v 3 o hake b had k of the British trooPs & | are being shot in the trenches of | looms large the baseball umpire who © where we'll be the whole show. | more interesting because they belong | Will mak S unfavorable comment swept | Furope, and the world is living in a | VACD Addressed by several hundreds © don’t want our important delibera- [ to the ranks classed as “unskilled | t0_get it England. It resulted in| purly burly of events will be ; ors bidaqd . 5 4 S 1y days anufacturing | a ore limited measure somewhat the of indignant persons as “a robher 1ONS buried in the big cify papers. In |labor,” and therefore usually rated In the rvm\-‘ l\‘. 'nf(‘:r:::)\]x] ‘01'1”1: a mor te ure son hat th and t'ief,” doesn't it A small town wo could have the whole | as incapable of being unionized, save | there was keen appreci: same end men- | - = S ter e 1ab 4 mind it at all e ey s tening of Kitchener's 1abors. | tioned and forgotten. The human | Mew Osloan . ont page fo oursclves durtng the | in & Lelterskelior. - %W 0. foiios. | ¥elue of the sbad and herring. Mill e el | 5 . = : e °d water power were ; o whole convention. They deserve to succeed. More mowes | owners who used water power : e | obliged to build fishways by means | 2o pective that it will retain the | The Fealth Muse. ot i of which the fish could go ahove the (Waterbury Republican.) ointed Minister of Munitions, |y age of fifty dead but a short time. (South Norwalk Sentinel Santire e i e S e dams. The cconomle idea underlying [ Waterbury is havir baby week. i r i | : 5 > ortfolio was introduced into | ,,ing js pecoming so used to Waterbury's Baby Weck net and David Llovd George | . That’s hones And who can blame [ to their elbows! o ; : ; Witer the sea Fight i Rt i o [Kitchener to attend to the| o yneortunates directly concerned, | “How doth the busy hittle gy enstomed to wearin e Gl the fishways was essentially sound, E army alone, task L § - | Improve each shining hour~ zatolbanzealiatiag brondl: and scan (New York Sun.) but for many years it has been dis- | . 1 of the arm those who have lost their families or | 1. 12" SR fome ente hadgea u tas p ind Tl i s et e e TR o o P P \ their homes, will remember- Some of | And causing it to sour.® J¥ for notice of thelr doings as any | sympathizers in this country the [ practices of net fishermen is a certain | and old, mothers and those wlo are use may but there will be few that | women who aver invaded a elty for | world is informed that Great Brit- | sign of lack of interest in conserva- | DIVTL"M»\}J“'F: brides and old malds | So sings the bulletin of the munici- | convention purpose ain's mastery of the sea has been|tion. Why should it be necessary to| alike. that all bables should b e ; 5 i | pal health department of Saranne e s broken. The Kaiser is hailed as “Ad- | wait for the killing of the last shad | healthy. Babics are , o Sirectecsand pwillireturnie 2 fito it e Gl oI O e et L e miral of the Atlantic.” The German | before making the spawning grounds | weak and so dependent upon | : ame B faESL plsmiiyeotnohleymindd navy is proclaimed ruler of the deep | accessible from the ocean? | around them that the object of a e ! baby week is not so much to instruct | the babies as to instruct the folks who handle babies, the folks who just love | babies, but don't have the good for- It is because there i widespread among men and women, young ffor any man. ‘ n 1850, in Ireland, of French lish descent, he recetved his | g0 (ui oyes winl be temporaril ining at Woolwich, following saw short service in the the events across the water when our | from the same source: he might have substituted ‘Little pots of flowers, little pots of L e e e eler i paint, “hublicity Anyhow, to n newspa-| If these boasts are well fbunded A Reserve Police Force. Make attractive neighborhoods out of ner man, it does seem as if the ruling | that fact will be presently disclosed. (Bridgeport Telegram.) them that ain’ ion of the sreater part of human- | With Germany in command of the ond | sea, and Britain deprived of her su- | brussian war. From that | his rise was a serles of bril- ps. He was appointed com- st i ‘ i The lacal police board has taken | tune of living svith them oody campaisi ame | Once upon a time there was inclndine the more Hdctine et Aling Ln e e e el T i picedyisampaier Iheea e [0 L : i e ey urges all cit- | 1 ! part of 1t isnublicity. Tt's | premacy, Teutonic commerce will re- | 1"”"“”“‘"“ ';Li;:"""g,.o:::fc‘ eled|| n o lnaEHCuaD DROVARd £ the upper Nile. Upon his | Citizen of a Powerful Demaoc TACY | izens to zet busy in a gencral, pro- | What overy ambitlons person wants, | Sume its ante-bellum freedom. The | ;‘:‘;o QUERLCes S ‘,,;mr mt it 1\m"~(f(:]l\\~“ }.}“‘ 3 a was raised to | known as the United States of | tract anti-fly, anti-dirt and pro- | Energetie s R -t | merchant ships tied up in neutral | e ; | sens O SHOE ey Eema o v America who labored S on e LR 1 falented women WAant | ets will load and sail; the vessels | Under the rules now in effect, tWo | have such ideas are ap lage. South Africa saw his| A ahorec under e | beauty campaign. For— « ss than anyhody . although ir‘w.m ”-mw home harhors will set | undetailed policemen will alwa be e el b forth on their accustomed voyages. on duty at headquarters, ready for| ters—smart ones who won't 2 ' e v lcallsille eorwhere Bl anys |leos SO caip o Lt i i resumption of interrupted el Azl e A the Boers. After a cam- | Fresidents. Every four years bloomin’ soul Why not fall into line with old John | trading, not in lists of warships sunk ""““ bl m‘““-lm"i pnch e lvortn ,n(m:'u-\ \\mJH;” noting 2 X o to e L oh T 7 I % vho is in urgent need rotectio worth attending and all of it India he again returned to | would get out and Shout His Head Milton and recognize decent and Je- | @and sailors Kkilled, will be the proof | V rth f : e gt it ot once by calline polics |\oaliabls aithoushtomered. s o ori r i S citimate e of . German contention. Unt can get it at once by | valuable, althoug ¢ ec n Consul General in Cairo, | Off until Friend Wife thought he had Such poetic appeals should certain mate Newspaner publicity as the | Of jihs ‘”l'i"}' e ‘”“.] m“: headquarters Under the former | without any strings by the who proc sult - StainA Paturall Spuri of alen enliitelio accomplishec 5 ship > £ T % 1 He in-(ivaDieduceitertlis [ and whiy confinel i A iin L souicr aloon 5 o O ot be sald fo have snifted | S¥stem, with no men held in reserve, | have voluntarily responded to 1 I (el Ui e L e menssand mengtoo—con SlioSeasc s i . a patrolman would be called in from | for helpers. Mothers wiil » European war but| haled smoke from red fire until his fess the S S Z rom e Island Kingdom to the Cen- | & D2 ma £ or helr h i pa- | tra and that would sometimes involve | jng ang bathing and dressing great loss of time. amusing the baby and everyone In half of the palice S, the | who is interested will get much other essence of efficiency is promptness. | jhrormation at the exhibit which will A Thouschoilder whose home % belne |y o ome value nome tinis If not 1o will seem of little moment. A MODERN FABLE, Tina rts as a fighting man where | mental delusion that he and several | "It ain't the individual nor the city | fhor are seidom <o ahout it as a whole, as this Fot ngs woman B ceasru) uelling | n.illion Fellow Citizens nominated A . puccessful in quelling the | But the everlastin’ team work of every nd indeed, why he ashamed of it? In the in Egypt shortly before the | become bereft of his senses. to return to England before | lungs were ready to split and he | Financ from secing thei o5 in the 1 hostilities were under way. | absorbed Hot*® Air from political | (Norwich Evening | No. Not Healy. — platforms until he was well nigh That business men of the country S 5 Make Tvery Day Clean-Up Day (New Haven Journal Courier). YUAN SHI-KAL suffocated. After each campaign it| are preparing to meet contingencies i (Wa ; | consequent on the termination of the Waterhury Democrat). The well-informed Hartford corre- ng the news of the death of was necessary for him to be intro- S X . e e >l e A gets scant comfort from s diataly ST R 0" | war is more reassuring than their iN-Up weeks have come and | spondent of the New Haven Sunday | Lurglarized ¢ immediatel ¢ 1ve a baby un- duced to his Better Half and the Ve © ng D 1 optimism so far as it is expected in Much community g00d has re- | Union writes to that newspaper that | the visit of the police the following | ger a year old take note of what you Family. But he didn’'t care, for ' the opinions received in answer to | sulted from theip aetivitie Now the | J. Henry Rorabick, the experienced | day, or cven twenty minutgs after the | gee and hear and lear and get republi- rglar has fled. He wants the pa-| j0 adqvice and infor on you can lman at once, not at some later| \any mothers will want to from Furope comes a re- h the far East telllng of the |, . .. 1. Lelped to nominate questions sent out by a New York and | thing to remember is that every day | chairman of the Connecticut bu f the President of China, President? Chicago firm. TIf our business is con- | should be clean-up day in every com W state committe not in favor | tro ! enter the e L v ducted sanely and wise forcthought | munity. Nothine will do more to | of the nomination of Frank E. Healy, j hour when he can be called in from | n¢ir babies in the contest and shoula But one day this Citizen bought Up | 15 (51cen of the readjustments in tr: keep healthful and beautiful a city | of Wind it o overnord Lif |la beatiAmala i man wholacl thrents (s el Cag R SR he | all the leading newspapers. In one | which common sense indicates as a | than the prober care of its highways | is knc writes this correspondent, | ened by hold-up men or beaten bY | )| he well worth striving for ) Ty | e read a despatch from Chicago | necessary result of world trade con- | and byways. Cleanliness in and about | “that Chairman Roraback, while per- | thugs wants help immediately—not | cause no baby can make too as were those of the Brit- | ditions when peace comes, means will | the home means freedom from dis nally friendly to Mr. Healy, does | ir the future. _ | improvement in its physical cona £ We President of a be found to meet the internal proh- | ease. Disease orizinates in filth or at helieve that he would be the Two men do not constitute a com- | ana cver ort to encourage better R e o o lems which are sure to confront us. | least the causes of most ilis find their | sirongest candidate to nominate, and | plete reserve force for a city the size | care of babies is an cffort for the im- Ry arcaithanils - 5 6s¥they marched fromithelrallroadil Nof Slone inebmanuracitre bhil S| oistis i v i e t reason he is opposed to his | of Bridgeport. There ought to be at provement of the general welfare of ailment indidacy.”” The nomination of Mr. | least two reserves an call in every | {he communits consider the emphasis which the an-; are also removed. Give proper at- aly for governor on the republican | precinct. But that would involve The show at the City Hall annex is swers received put upon the marked | tention to outdoor surrounding and et would be both preposterous and | cighteen men on reserve duty in| gpen this afternoon and evening and He was removed from | Bridgeport, counting three shifts.| al) day throughout the week, inelud i-Kai (Yuan being John). The exploits of | pr ying: “The delegates were coming town. Headed by blaring brass B Btates hie hos teos o ; he has been gr siations to the various headquarters merchants of the country may well | the causes of most of ou & an unprogressive nation | i 1 g ur hundred |\ ;jque experiment. For the first time ubilant in the enjoyment of an dern power. bjects were g increase in the purchasing power of | summer annoyances such as the fly | disastrou . ¢ hand. | jn many moons they had not been | the country and the present manifes- | and mosquito will he largely or en- | office by a republican governor, Rollin | The important fact is that the pres-| jne circus Visit, it, talk about i UL nev- | sealed, signed and delivered in ad- tation of this in increased retail trade. | tively overcom Ruhbhish should not | Woodruff, upon charges of political | ent board ha made a beginning | genq your ncighbors to it, and hoost pras marked with success, |yynce by thelr leade They as- A sudden cessation of hostilities in | he allowed to accumulate., Holes in | corruption after a republican attorney | toward the needed reserve system, | fna cause of better health, better foad backyards and vacant lots should be | general, Marcus H Holcomb, now ! e and hold rainwater and thus become a | gated them. The voters of the state e — { You'll thereby be boosting the best in- brecding for mosquitoes. Tt is|of Connecticut have not always exer- If the republicans should nominate | torests of yourselves, vour judgment in selecting | T. R. at Chicago, would he become & | ;14 the state t < mbined with such effort as | their state officers. but they have | republican or stay a progressive? | " | that minimizes tr saibility of a | will N zood order and cleanliness | never shown a disposition to condone | Making Horace Greeley the Demo- but’ this candidate for | usual. py s 5 s the possibili anliness | 0 e Demo - e rule _t : : o Put they will have the DPill‘ pange in our fortunes as sudden as | about the home, that will do much | acts such as Mr. Healy was found [ cratic Presidential candidate in 187 | Looks now as if it would be a failure in his knowl- | sugar-coated this time. They will was that caused by the outbreak of | to reduce the death toll of ;-rcvonmm/»‘ ;uilty of. It will not be Healy this |did not make Greeley a democrat.— | poor June for the Favorite Son Crc ssics. A secretaryship with ‘seem’ 10 come to conclusion. of the war, disease. Springfield Republican. —Newburg Journal. @ s not all rose 2 nd the efliciency of the department| ,nq better surroundings for babies | % 3 s student in some respects. | & Europe would probably mean a les- ts, | sumed to feel confident that the : v Lt e 2 e ! Otherwise they will catch | governor of the state, had investi- | is improved thereby. whenever you get any opportunity. sening for the time of this purchasing power through drop in demand for termining the make up of the ticket. | labor and products: this would di- Kai was a violation of the an. | were to > the real factor in de- itions of his country. Ex- | neighbors | | xaminations of all who wish | A¢ 4 matter of course they will not. ' rectly affect merchandizing. rm-i these little clean-up precau- | cised the finest ] with the government has|They are ta he delivered just as BTeat danger is in a present optimism year,